He may be Parisian to the core, but Pierre Mahéo has one arguably un-French trait: even when the headlines are grim, he somehow still manages to see the glass as half-full. “You have to know when to stop listening to the news and focus on the task at hand,” he offered during a showroom presentation of his fall pre-collection. “I suppose I’m a bit American in that way, because I tend to look for the positive. It’s the only way to keep moving forward. You fight with what you have because we are lucky enough to live in the most beautiful, most-watched city in the world when it comes to fashion.” In nearly 15 years, Officine Générale has built an arsenal out of authenticity and a relaxed, reliably Parisian sensibility. At home and, increasingly, abroad, its philosophy of “renewal over revolution” has garnered a steady, loyal clientele.
The men’s wear in this pre-fall collection is informed by Mahéo’s own closet and stars a few all-terrain workwear jackets plus a riff on a 1940s-era JC Penney jean jacket in Japanese selvedge, which he scored decades ago and continues to wear even as it disintegrates at one shoulder. Here, it returns Officine-ified, in a dark indigo wash with faintly weathered pin-tuck folds, patch pockets and subtly patinated buttons. The ’60s-inflected flat-fronts the designer wears year-round are here too, now with tweaked belt loops and a straight-loose cut, while a handful of favorite chinos were hybridized into soft, sage green fatigues with a pre-loved aspect. Mahéo loves a deep dive into materials, and here he incorporates “dressed-down classic” suiting in a lightweight wool, cashmere, and silk serge, the better to span a retail season spliced by spring showers, sweltering heat, and unpredictable cold snaps.
Women’s wear likewise nodded to vintage, with weathered denims cut to slouch and leathers with had-it-forever attitude. Pieces reliably chic enough to move from office to gallery-hop to dinner are the brand’s stock in trade, and this collection delivered with jackets ranging from checked to discreetly frayed and a cropped black number with toggle closures that could fit in just about anywhere. There were some workhorse pieces too—easy trousers that sit perfectly on the hips, a shirred black shift, a sharp gray vest—but the lineup’s savviest idea came from an unlikely source: the pinstripe jacket, now fit with a little tab at the waist that lets it shift from boxy to cinched with a single move. Whether or not pinstripes are actually part of their world, it’s precisely that kind of detail that keeps Officine obsessives circling back season in, season out.
“You can’t speak to everyone; it’s vulgar to even try,” the designer observed. “I’d rather speak well to a small community, with a point of view, values, and products they like.”
